If you’re a business owner or leader, you probably have experience being viewed as the supposed expert. Being the one responsible for all the decisions. Being the one everyone turns to for answers. Being the one responsible for ensuring the business is successful enough to survive another day.
Maybe you’re living it right now.
Try as you might, you can’t be an expert at everything at once. No one is. So, how do you take steps to utilize and encourage others to contribute the magic in their heads to make your company better? How do you reduce the pressure of having to come up with all the answers?
A few years back I started making wedding rings out of wood. Crafting a ring from a couple of pieces of wood is a skill of its own, but what makes or breaks the look of a ring is the finishing process. Because the surface of the wood is imperfect, it’s the removal of material in a structured way that brings out its shimmer.
Wood is an interesting medium to work with. Naturally, it consists of colors, grains, and pours that can be relatively easily manipulated. Interestingly, though, wood takes its shape and reveals its beauty through the loss of material. In fact, it can only ever lose material. Sure, you can glue on additional pieces, but once removed, perfectly matching the grain and color of the remaining wood is extremely difficult.
Beginning with course sandpaper capable of removing significant material, you remove visible imperfections and level the surface. As the piece takes shape, you gradually progress to finer and finer grit. Each progression removes the scratches left behind by the previous step. Eventually, as you move from 80 grit toward 1000, 2000, 4000 grit, and beyond, the wood begins to take on a shine. The more level the surface, the greater the shine. There is no shortcut. Skipping too many steps leaves the scratches from the previous steps, creating a wavy surface that impacts the glimmer in the final result. It takes time, skill, and yes, different grits applied in the right order.
Our companies and teams are made up of a multitude of people with a broad range of passions, experiences, and skills. Like sandpaper, we need the skills and talents of each member to create a great business. Like sandpaper, if we try to skip steps or apply the skills to the wrong places, we wind up with an inferior outcome. Sure, you’ll still have a finished product, but will it be what you aspired to in your vision? With the right structure, we give our teams the ability to see when and where their skills can be best utilized and the freedom to apply them.
And just like the finishing process, remember, it takes time and practice to get really good at collectively utilizing the magic in each individual’s head to create a superior business with superior products. If you need help doing this in your business, let me know; I’d be happy to help where I can.
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